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284 RELATIVITY, THE GENERAL THEORY

The third theme, Mach's conjecture on the dynamic origins of inertia, leads us
to Einstein's work on cosmology.


  1. Einstein and Mach 's Principle. The central innovation in Mach's mechan-
    ics is the abolition of absolute space in the formulation of the law of inertia. Write
    this law as: A system on which no forces act is either at rest or in uniform motion
    relative to xxx. Then
    xxx = absolute space Newton
    xxx = the fixed stars
    idealized as a
    rigid system Mach
    'When ... we say that a body preserves unchanged its direction and velocity in
    space, our assertion is nothing more or less than an abbreviated reference to the
    entire universe' [M10]. Those are Mach's words and italics. He argued further
    that the reference to the entire universe could be restricted to the heavy bodies at
    large distances which make up the fixed stars idealized as a rigid system, since the
    relative motion of the body with regard to nearby bodies averages out to zero.
    Mach goes on to raise a new question.* Newton's law of inertia refers to
    motions that are uniform relative to an absolute space; this law is a kinematic first
    principle. By contrast, his own version of the law of inertia refers to motions of
    bodies relative to the fixed stars. Should one not seek a dynamic explanation of
    such motions, just as one explains dynamically the planetary orbits by means of
    gravitational dynamics or the relative motion of electrically-charged particles by
    means of electrodynamics? These are not Mach's own words. However, this
    dynamic view is implicit in his query: 'What would become of the law of inertia
    if the whole of the heavens began to move and the stars swarmed in confusion?
    How would we apply it then? How would it be expressed then? ... Only in the
    case of a shattering of the universe [do] we learn that all bodies [his italics] each
    with its share are of importance in the law of inertia' [Mil]. We do not find in
    Mach's book how this importance of all bodies manifests itself; he never proposed
    an explicit dynamic scheme for his new interpretation of the law of inertia. Mach
    invented Mach's law of inertia, not Mach's principle. Reading his discourse on
    inertia is not unlike reading the Holy Scriptures. The text is lucid but one senses,
    perhaps correctly, perhaps wrongly, a deeper meaning behind the words. Let us
    see how Einstein read Mach.
    Soon after Einstein arrived in Prague and broke his long silence on gravitation,
    he published a short note entitled 'Does There Exist a Gravitational Action Anal-
    ogous to the Electrodynamical Induction Effect?' [E36]. In this paper (based on
    the rudimentary gravitation theory of the Prague days), he showed that if a hol-
    low, massive sphere is accelerated around an axis passing through its center, then
    the inertial mass of a mass point located at the sphere's center is increased, an
    effect which foreshadows the Lense-Thirring effect [T6].


*Seealso[Hll].
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